Jump to content

Elizabeth McMaster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cydebot (talk | contribs) at 10:59, 9 October 2016 (Robot - Moving category People from Chicago, Illinois to Category:People from Chicago per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2016 September 6.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Elizabeth McMaster (December 27, 1847 – March 3, 1903) was a Canadian humanitarian and head of the committee which founded the Hospital for Sick Children.[1]

Early Years

Elizabeth Jennet Wyllie was born in Toronto in 1847, the second daughter of Mary Ann Reid and George Black Wyllie. She married Samuel Fenton McMaster who was a nephew of William McMaster,[1] a Senator and the namesake of McMaster University in 1865.[2] In the first decade of her marriage she devoted her time to raising children and philanthropic works for the poor. After that ten years, she began to work more intensely with medical aid for the sick and poor.[3]

Later Years

In her forties and after her husband's death in 1888, she trained to become a nurse in Chicago[1] at Illinois Training School for Nurses (program merged in 1926 into the University of Chicago's School of Nursing and ceased to exist in 1929[4]).[2] Graduating in 1891 McMaster left Chicago to worked at the Hospital of the Good Samaritan in Los Angeles and Children's Home, an orphanage in Schenectady, New York.[2] She later returned to Chicago, where she died in 1903.

Legacy

The Great Ormond Street Hospital was the influence for her to establish the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

References

  1. ^ a b c Young J (1994). "A divine mission: Elizabeth McMaster and the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, 1875-92". Can Bull Med Hist. 11 (1): 71–90. PMID 11639375. Full Text.
  2. ^ a b c http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7154&
  3. ^ "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online".
  4. ^ http://libsysdigi.library.uiuc.edu/OCA/Books2009-06/historyofillinoi00schr/historyofillinoi00schr.pdf